Fixes: #5134
This ensures that `pulumi history` has been deprecated in favor of
the new `pulumi stack history` command. The deprecated command will
be removed in v3.0.0 of Pulumi
Fixes: #5126
In the newServiceSecretsManager, we were loading and saving the project stack
without understanding if any changes had actually been made - e.g. changing the
stack to be a new secrets provider
This has now been guarded against, tests added to understand when it will
actually be saved and we no longer get unnecessary config sorting when interacting
with a default stack AND no longer get an empty config map in our config
file when we initiate a new stack with a default secrets provider
Fixes: #5104
This reverts a code change that was checking initially for the
SecretsProvider of the currentStack being an empty string. When it
was an empty string, we were checking the backend type and we were
setting a serviceSecretsManager. This wasn't correct, the logic
needed to check for an empty SecretsProvider AND an empty EncryptionSalt
The important part is that it needed to check for the EncryptionSalt
to make sure it wasn't a passphrase secrets manger
We make several calls to `os/user`, which uses CGO and means
cross-compilation is not possible. This replaces `os/user` with the
`luser` package, which is a drop-in replacement which does not use `CGO`
Update pip, setuptools, and wheel in the virtual environment before installing dependencies as recommended by the Python documentation. This should help avoid failures when only source distributions are available for a package and pip attempts to build a wheel locally.
Previously, streamInvoke was only supported by
the query command. Copied the implementation
into the resource monitor, which will allow
streaming invoke commands to run during updates.
Also fixed a bug with cancellation of streaming
invokes. The check was comparing against a
hardcoded string, which did not match the actual
error string. Instead, we can rely on the error code.
* [WIP] Adding the langage SDK specific docker images
Fixes: #3789
* add multiple os build
This introduces multiple containers images with various different OS's.
The base build is based on debian (symlinked from the Dockerfile.debian)
build.
We also have UBi based images, and alpine based images
* Adding the langage SDK specific docker images
Fixes: #3789
* remove alpine builds
* test docker readme sync
* fix description
* fix name of sync task
Co-authored-by: Lee Briggs <lee@leebriggs.co.uk>
Several users reported cases where error messages would
cause a panic if they contained accented characters. I wasn't
able to reproduce this failure locally, but tracked down the
panic to logging gRPC calls. The Message field is typed as
a string, which requires all of the characters to be valid UTF-8.
This change runs each log string through the strings.ToValidUTF8
function, which will replace any invalid characters with the
"unknown" character. This should prevent the the logger from
panicking.
Pylint currently reports `E1101: Instance of 'Bucket' has no 'id' member (no-member)` on lines in Pulumi Python programs like:
```python
pulumi.export('bucket_name', bucket.id)
```
Here's a description of this message from http://pylint-messages.wikidot.com/messages:e1101:
> Used when an object (variable, function, …) is accessed for a non-existent member.
>
> False positives: This message may report object members that are created dynamically, but exist at the time they are accessed.
This appears to be a false positive case: `id` isn't set in the constructor (it's set later in `register_resource`) and Pylint isn't able to figure this out statically. `urn` has the same problem. (Oddly, Pylint doesn't complain when accessing other resource output properties).
This change refactors `register_resource` so that `id` and `urn` can be assigned in the resource's constructor, so that Pylint can see it being assigned. The change also does the same with `read_resource`.
When running `pulumi up`, after the preview, we prompt asking whether to proceed with the update. If you type to filter the options and then hit an arrow key a couple times, the CLI panics. This is a bug in the `survey` library we depend on. The issue has been fixed in the library upstream; this change updates our dependency.
Automatically create a virtual environment and install dependencies in it with `pulumi new` and `pulumi policy new` for Python templates.
This will save a new `virtualenv` runtime option in `Pulumi.yaml` (`PulumiPolicy.yaml` for policy packs):
```yaml
runtime:
name: python
options:
virtualenv: venv
```
`virtualenv` is the path to a virtual environment that Pulumi will use when running `python` commands.
Existing projects are unaffected and can opt-in to using this by setting `virtualenv`, otherwise, they'll continue to work as-is.
This class was available in the pulumi.resource module, but was not exported from the core `pulumi` module as intended for all public APIs at this level.
The previous attempt to allow this didn't actually allow it, so this is
take two. As part of the previous attempt, I thought after tweaking the
test I had observed the test failing, and then succeeding after making
the product changes, but I must have been mistaken.
It turns out that our existing mocks tests weren't running at all
because of a missing `__init__.py` file. Once the missing `__init__.py`
is added, the tests run, but other tests ("test mode" tests) fail
because the code that creates the mocks and resources will run during
test discovery, and setting the mocks modifies global state.
To address the test issue, I've moved the mocks tests into their own
`test_with_mocks` package that can be run separately from other tests.
And addressed the original issue, by creating a root Stack resource if
one isn't already present when the mocks are set.
With these changes, a resource struct may tag a field with the empty
string. If such a field is present, any resource outputs that were not
unmarshalled into other fields will be unmarshalled into this field,
which must be a `MapOutput`.
Fixes#4629.
Adds support for RegisterResource to accept map-typed implementations if Input as well as the existing struct-typed implementations. Currently these must be fully untyped - but both map[string]pulumi.Input and map[string]interface{} are allowed. In the future, it's plausible that a mode where the data itself is a map, but the ElementType implementation returns a struct could be supported, with the struct used to provide type information over the untyped map.
This change allows importing modules with calls to `pulumi.export` in unit tests. Previously, you'd have to structure the Python program in a way that avoids the `pulumi.export` from being called from unit tests.
* [sdk/python] Improve `ResoruceOptions.merge` type
The implementation correctly handles `None` inputs, so the type should allow these as well.
* Add CHANGELOG
When writing the snapshot to the filestate bucket, we can retry in the
event of an error, which helps users who are experiencing issues around
write rates to GCS
In particular, ensure that they are keyword-safe. This affects
`aws:lambda:*` in particular: prior to these changes, we were generating
code into `pulumi_aws.lamdba`, which is not referencable due to its use
of the `lamdba` keyword. With these changes, we generate code into
`pulumi_aws.lambda_`.
There is also a small fix for multi-line non-formatted strings: these
strings do not need escaped braces.
When referencing `secretOutputNames` in from another stack, spurious
diffs can often be created because the secret output slice was not
ordered.
This PR orders the slice before it's added to the propertymap, ensuring
the order always remains the same
Fixes: #4444
Before:
```
$ pulumi stack
Current stack is 47BE2956-D665-4EC3-9AE6-4D4A1C417074:
Managed by demo-mbp
No updates yet; run 'pulumi up'
Current stack resources (0):
No resources currently in this stack
Use `pulumi stack select` to change stack; `pulumi stack ls` lists known ones
```
After:
```
$ pulumi stack --show-name
47BE2956-D665-4EC3-9AE6-4D4A1C417074
```
* [codegen/go] Fix accessors on struct ptr outputs
The accesor methods on nestred struct Ptr outputs were previously not accepting pointer typed inputs as they should, and would thus always panic if used.
The "simple" fix would be to just accept the pointer type and blindly dereference it. But this doesn't seem like the right experience - it would make these accessors very unsafe to use in practice.
Instead, this PR implements the accessors on pointer-typed outputs as nil-coaslescing, always lifting the output type into a pointer type and flowing a nil value into the result type. This ensures the accessor will not nil-deref, and that user code can handle the `nil` value itself (or use `.Apply` directly to implement more specialized behaviour).
Before:
```go
// Name of your S3 bucket.
func (o BuildStorageLocationPtrOutput) Bucket() pulumi.StringOutput {
return o.ApplyT(func(v BuildStorageLocation) string { return v.Bucket }).(pulumi.StringOutput)
}
```
After:
```go
// Name of your S3 bucket.
func (o BuildStorageLocationPtrOutput) Bucket() pulumi.StringPtrOutput {
return o.ApplyT(func(v *BuildStorageLocation) *string {
if v == nil {
return nil
}
return &v.Bucket
}).(pulumi.StringPtrOutput)
}
```
However, due to the decision to have this more usable behaviour, this is a breaking change, as some/many accessors now return a pointer type when they previously did not.
Fixespulumi/pulumi-azure#530.
* Mark nested property types as requiring ptr types
* Add CHANGELOG
* More fixes
After importing some resources, and running a second update with the
import still applied, an unexpected replace would occur. This wouldn't
happen for the vast majority of resources, but for some it would.
It turns out that the resources that trigger this are ones that use a
different format of identifier for the import input than they do for the
ID property.
Before this change, we would trigger an import-replacement when an
existing resource's ID property didn't match the import property, which
would be the case for the small set of resources where the input
identifier is different than the ID property.
To avoid this, we now store the `importID` in the statefile, and
compare that to the import property instead of comparing the ID.
When setting structured config values using `--path`, we automatically
treat values that can be converted into an integer via `strconv.Atoi` as
an integer, rather than as a string.
However, this ends up converting values like "0123456" into the integer
123456, stripping the leading 0, which isn't desirable for values like
commit SHAs, etc., where you want to keep the 0 (and keep it a string).
This change makes it so that values starting with 0 are not implicitly
converted to an integer; instead such values will remain a string.
* Make `async:true` the default for `invoke` calls (#3750)
* Switch away from native grpc impl. (#3728)
* Remove usage of the 'deasync' library from @pulumi/pulumi. (#3752)
* Only retry as long as we get unavailable back. Anything else continues. (#3769)
* Handle all errors for now. (#3781)
* Do not assume --yes was present when using pulumi in non-interactive mode (#3793)
* Upgrade all paths for sdk and pkg to v2
* Backport C# invoke classes and other recent gen changes (#4288)
Adjust C# generation
* Replace IDeployment with a sealed class (#4318)
Replace IDeployment with a sealed class
* .NET: default to args subtype rather than Args.Empty (#4320)
* Adding system namespace for Dotnet code gen
This is required for using Obsolute attributes for deprecations
```
Iam/InstanceProfile.cs(142,10): error CS0246: The type or namespace name 'ObsoleteAttribute' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) [/Users/stack72/code/go/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/sdk/dotnet/Pulumi.Aws.csproj]
Iam/InstanceProfile.cs(142,10): error CS0246: The type or namespace name 'Obsolete' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) [/Users/stack72/code/go/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/sdk/dotnet/Pulumi.Aws.csproj]
```
* Fix the nullability of config type properties in C# codegen (#4379)
These changes implement `GetRequiredPlugins` for Go using a registry
mechanism and an alternate entry point for `pulumi.Run`. Packages that
require plugins are expected to register themselves with the Pulumi SDK.
When `pulumi.Run` is used and the `PULUMI_PLUGINS` envvar is truthy, the
program will dump a JSON-encoded description of its required plugins to
stdout. The language host then uses this description to respond to
The changes in #4004 caused old provider configuration to be used even when a provider was different between inputs and outputs, in the case that the diff returned DiffUnkown.
To better handle that case, we compute a more accurate (but still conservative) DiffNone or DiffSome so that we can ensure we conservatively update to a new provider when needed, but retain the performance benefit of not creating and configuring a new provider as much as possible.
Part of https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/issues/814.
Fixes: https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform-bridge/issues/119
This allows us to specify an overlays block e.g.
```
Overlay: &tfbridge.OverlayInfo{
DestFiles: []string{
"pulumi_docker/docker.py",
"pulumi_docker/image.py",
},
},
```
The overlays files are treated differently to normal module files
as they are not generated. This structure means that we will emit
the correct entries in the __init__.py file
Without this structure (ie. pulumi_pkgname), the generator actually
copies the file (i.e. docker.py) to the root of the Python SDK. This
is because the structure of the Python SDK has a sub-folder than that
of the NodeJS SDK
I tested this using PR https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-docker/pull/141
and this now works as expected and we can take advantage of the new
Python overlays for Docker
These changes implement `GetRequiredPlugins` for Go using a registry
mechanism and an alternate entry point for `pulumi.Run`. Packages that
require plugins are expected to register themselves with the Pulumi SDK.
When `pulumi.Run` is used and the `PULUMI_PLUGINS` envvar is truthy, the
program will dump a JSON-encoded description of its required plugins to
stdout. The language host then uses this description to respond to
`GetRequiredPlugins`.
* started transformations for go sdk
* added first basic test
* added second test with child
* added RegisterStackTransformation
* added a couple tests to lifecycle_test
* update CHANGELOG and test
* included TODO for #3846
We upgraded to `ts-node@^8.0.0` 2.5 months ago as part of https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/pull/3627, though it seems it wasn't really necessary to make that update for the purposes of the PR - updating the default TypeScript version.
The `8.0.0` series of `ts-node` unfortunately dropped all of it's caching support, due to what appear to be some corner-case correctness issues with the cache. We have not seen reports of those issues for Pulumi, and have much more experience with the `7.0.0` series overall (2 years vs. 2 months). The performance difference between `7.0.0` and `8.0.0` of ts-node for Pulumi is massive - it adds 4-4.5s to each of `pulumi preview` and `pulumi up` even on a trivial program.
As a result, for now we will revert back to `ts-node@^7.0.0`. In the future, we may want to look into our own caching layer or alternative to `ts-node` to ensure we get the behaviour and performance we expect.
Part of #3671.
In the very common case where provider configuration does not change, during preview we were calling `Configure` on the cloud provider twice - once for the "old" configuration, and once for the "new" configuration.
This is not necessary, and we can just avoid using the new provider when configuration has not changed, since we will have configured the old provider very early so if we can use that we should.
Note that this technically doesn't prevent the second call to `Configure` from being made, but it prevents us from ever waiting on it. We may want to go further and avoid even calling `Configure` on the provider in this case.
Part of #3671.
These changes add support for mocking the resource monitor to the NodeJS
and Python SDKs. The proposed mock interface is a simplified version of
the standard resource monitor that allows an end-user to replace the
usual implementations of ReadResource/RegisterResource and Invoke with
their own. This can be used in unit tests to allow for precise control
of resource outputs and invoke results.
It appears there are cases where our IsInteractive heuristics return true, but terminal.GetSize returns an error. In these cases, we should assume we do not have an interactive terminal and avoid trying to render interactive progress by default.
Fixes#3935.
Set an option to increase the memory limit on protobuf
parsing so that we can handle larger gRPC payloads.
Co-authored-by: Evan Boyle <EvanBoyle@users.noreply.github.com>
We can't correctly print simple messages for prelude events when doing progress based display in a terminal, as it would lead to resetting the display of the table rendering.
This does mean that `--show-config` no longer works in the default terminal display mode - but it's not clear it *can* work correctly (at least as currently implemented) since it doesn't cleanly participate in the table rendering.
For cases where `--show-config` is not set (the norm) -nothing would have been printed anyway, so the changes here just avoid resetting the table rendering unnecessarily.
Fixes#3469.
The provider plugin protocol is to write a port number followed by `\n`. We must guarantee we do that even on Windows, so must avoid Python `print` statements which implicitly rewrite newlines to platform specific character sequences.
Fixes#3807.
We were seeing that ~all same steps were requiring checkpoint writes due to percieving a difference between `Dependencies` being `nil` and `[]URN{}` - which should be considered the same for this purpose.